Distant set distinguishing edge colourings of graphs
Jakub Przyby{\l}o

TL;DR
This paper extends the concept of set distinguishing edge colorings in graphs to distant vertices, proposing bounds on the number of colors needed based on graph degree and minimum degree, using probabilistic methods.
Contribution
It introduces a conjecture for bounds on the r-adjacent strong chromatic index for graphs with minimum degree constraints and proves these bounds for graphs with high minimum degree relative to maximum degree.
Findings
Proves upper bounds for graphs with minimum degree proportional to maximum degree
Supports the conjecture for graphs with minimum degree at least r+2
Uses probabilistic methods to establish bounds in various graph classes
Abstract
We consider the following extension of the concept of adjacent strong edge colourings of graphs without isolated edges. Two distinct vertices which are at distant at most in a graph are called -adjacent. The least number of colours in a proper edge colouring of a graph such that the sets of colours met by any -adjacent vertices in are distinct is called the -adjacent strong chromatic index of and denoted by . It has been conjectured that if is connected of maximum degree and non-isomorphic to , while Hatami proved that there is a constant , , such that if [J. Combin. Theory Ser. B 95 (2005) 246--256]. We conjecture that a similar statement should hold for any , i.e., that for each positive integer there exist constants and…
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